A more mainstream publication interviews HD Moore, who calls Chrome the toughest browser: "Chrome was likely the most difficult target due to the extensive sandboxing."

An article in the very mainstream Washington Post notes that whilst other browsers are starting to chase Chrome's speed, Chrome is still the choice of the security conscious: "Both IE 9 and Firefox 4 look like major, welcome advances. But each falls short of Chrome in one key aspect: security."

An interesting interview with John Wilandar and Chaouki Bekrar (VUPEN CEO). The interview is nominally about Firefox 4 but includes quotes such as "I'd say Chrome's sandboxing model still beats all the other browsers from an end user perspective.", "At VUPEN, we measure the security of web browsers not by counting the number of their vulnerabilities, but by counting the number of days, weeks, or months that the vendor is taking to fix vulnerabilities affecting their browsers... Today, Google is fixing Chrome vulnerabilities much faster than any other vendor – usually one or two security updates each month. Microsoft, Mozilla, and Apple are are usually releasing security updates for their browsers every 3 months, which is too long.", "Relying on third-party auditor through reward and bounty programs is the most effective way to improve the security of browsers".